Potassium fulvate-modified graft copolymer of acrylic acid onto cellulose as efficient chelating polymeric sorbent

•A biomass based superabsorbent was prepared by linking potassium fulvate to cellulose during graft copolymerization of acrylic acid.•The new superabsorbent exhibited good mechanical strength and enhanced chemical activity.•Superabsorbency and multifunctionality improve the mass transfer during meta...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of biological macromolecules 2017-01, Vol.94 (Pt B), p.771-780
Hauptverfasser: Mohamed, Magdy F., Essawy, Hisham A., Ammar, Nabila S., Ibrahim, Hanan S.
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container_end_page 780
container_issue Pt B
container_start_page 771
container_title International journal of biological macromolecules
container_volume 94
creator Mohamed, Magdy F.
Essawy, Hisham A.
Ammar, Nabila S.
Ibrahim, Hanan S.
description •A biomass based superabsorbent was prepared by linking potassium fulvate to cellulose during graft copolymerization of acrylic acid.•The new superabsorbent exhibited good mechanical strength and enhanced chemical activity.•Superabsorbency and multifunctionality improve the mass transfer during metal ion uptake from aqueous solutions which is the reason for fast and high sorption capacity.•The superabsorbent showed high activity even at low pH and elevated temperatures and retained it up to three cycles of use. Acrylic acid (AA) was graft copolymerized from cellulose (Cell) in presence of potassium fulvate (KF) in order to enhance the chemical activity of the resulting chelating polymer and the handling as well. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) proved that KF was efficiently inserted and became a permanent part of the network structure of the sorbent in parallel during the grafting copolymerization. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) revealed intact homogeneous structure with uniform surface. This indicates improvement of the handling, however, it was not the case for the graft copolymer of acrylic acid onto cellulose in absence of KF, which is known to be brittle and lacks mechanical integrity. Effective insertion of this co-interpenetrating agent provided more functional groups, such as OH and COOH, which improved the chelating power of the produced sorbent as found for the removal of Cu2+ ions from its aqueous solutions (the removal efficiency reached ∼98.9%). Different models were used to express the experimental data. The results corroborated conformity of the pseudo-second order kinetic model and Langmuir isotherm model to the sorption process, which translates into dominance of the chemisorption. Regeneration of the chelating polymers under harsh conditions did not affect the efficiency of copper ions uptake up to three successive cycles. A thermodynamic investigation ensured exothermic nature of the adsorption process that became less favourable at higher temperatures.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2016.09.050
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Different models were used to express the experimental data. The results corroborated conformity of the pseudo-second order kinetic model and Langmuir isotherm model to the sorption process, which translates into dominance of the chemisorption. Regeneration of the chelating polymers under harsh conditions did not affect the efficiency of copper ions uptake up to three successive cycles. 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subjects Acrylates - chemistry
Acrylic acid
Adsorption
Benzopyrans - chemistry
Cations, Divalent
Cellulose
Cellulose - chemistry
Chelating Agents - chemical synthesis
Chelating Agents - chemistry
Chelation
Copper - isolation & purification
Grafting
Heavy metal ions
Humans
Kinetics
Polymerization
Potassium fulvate
Thermodynamics
Waste Water - chemistry
Water Pollutants, Chemical - isolation & purification
Water Purification - methods
title Potassium fulvate-modified graft copolymer of acrylic acid onto cellulose as efficient chelating polymeric sorbent
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